10 KiB
title, description, ha_category, ha_iot_class, ha_release, ha_domain
title | description | ha_category | ha_iot_class | ha_release | ha_domain | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Google Calendar Event | Instructions on how to use Google Calendars in Home Assistant. |
|
Cloud Polling | 0.33 |
The google
calendar platform allows you to connect to your
Google Calendars and generate binary sensors.
The sensors created can trigger based on any event on the calendar or only for
matching events. When you first setup this integration it will generate a new
configuration file google_calendars.yaml
in your configuration directory that will contain information about
all of the calendars you can see.
It also exposes a service to add an event to one of your Google Calendars.
Prerequisites
Generate a Client ID and Client Secret on Google Developers Console.
- First go to the Google Developers Console
- The wizard will ask you to choose a project to manage your application. Select a project and click continue.
- Verify that your calendar API was enabled and click 'Go to credentials'
- When it gets to the Page titled Add credentials to your project just click cancel.
- Navigate to APIs & Services (left sidebar) > Credentials
- Click on the field on the right of the screen, 'CONFIGURE CONSENT SCREEN', select "External" and create.
- Set the 'Application Name' (the name of the application asking for consent) to anything you want. We suggest "Home-Assistant".
- You then need to select a
Support email
. To do this, simply click the drop down box and select your email address. - Scroll to the bottom and click
save
. (You don't have to fill out anything else) - You will then be automatically taken to the OAuth consent screen, you don't need to do anything here. Instead, click Credentials in the menu on the left hand side of the screen, then click
+ Create credentials
(at the top of the screen), then selectOAuth client ID
. - Set the Application type to
TV and Limited Input
and give this credential set a name (like "Home Assistant Credentials") then click 'Create'. - You will then be presented with a pop-up saying 'OAuth client created' showing
Your Client ID
andYour Client Secret
. Make a note of these (for example, copy and paste them into a text editor) as you will need to put these in yourconfiguration.yaml
file shortly. Once you have noted these strings, clickOK
. If you need to find these credentials again at any point then simply nagivate toAPIs & Services
>Credentials
and you will seeHome Assistant Credentials
(or whatever you named them in the previous step) underOAuth 2.0 Clident IDs
. To view both theClient ID
andClient secret
, click on the pencil icon, this will take you to the settings page for these credentials and the information will be on the right hand side of the page. - We need to double check that the "Google Calendar API" has been automatically enabled. To do this, select
Library
from the menu, then search for "Google Calendar API". If it is enabled you will seeAPI Enabled
with a green tick next to it. If it is not enabled, then enable it.
If you will later be adding more scopes than just the "Google Calendar API" to the OAuth for this application, you will need to delete your token file under your Home Assistant Profile. You will lose your refresh token due to the re-authenticating to add more API access. It's recommended to use different authorizations for different pieces of Google.
Troubleshooting
If you are trying to switch to a new Google account then you would run into the following error message. Make sure to delete the existing .google.token file from your config
folder and restart Home Assistant to try again.
'oauth2client.client.HttpAccessTokenRefreshError: deleted_client: The OAuth client was deleted'
Configuration
To integrate Google Calendar in Home Assistant,
add the following section to your configuration.yaml
file:
# Example configuration.yaml entry
google:
client_id: YOUR_CLIENT_ID
client_secret: YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET
{% configuration %} client_id: description: Use the client ID you generated in the Prerequisites stage. required: true type: string client_secret: description: Use the client secret you generated in the Prerequisites stage. required: true type: string track_new_calendar: description: > Will automatically generate a binary sensor when a new calendar is detected. The system scans for new calendars only on startup. required: false type: boolean default: true {% endconfiguration %}
The next time you run or restart Home Assistant, you should find a new notification (the little bell icon in the lower left corner). Click on that notification it will give you a link and an authentication code. Click on that link to open a Google website where you should enter the code found in the notification. This will grant your Home Assistant service read-only access to all the Google Calendars that the account you authenticate with can read.
Calendar Configuration
Editing the google_calendars.yaml
file.
A basic entry for a single calendar looks like:
- cal_id: "*****@group.calendar.google.com"
entities:
- device_id: test_everything
name: Give me everything
track: true
- cal_id: "*****@group.calendar.google.com"
entities:
- device_id: test_important
name: Important Stuff
track: true
search: "#Important"
offset: "!!"
- device_id: test_unimportant
name: UnImportant Stuff
track: true
search: "#UnImportant"
{% configuration %}
cal_id:
description: The Google generated unique id for this calendar.
required: true
type: string
default: "DO NOT CHANGE THE DEFAULT VALUE"
entities:
description: Yes, you can have multiple sensors for a calendar!
required: true
type: list
keys:
device_id:
description: >
The name that all your automations/scripts
will use to reference this device.
required: true
type: string
name:
description: What is the name of your sensor that you'll see in the frontend.
required: true
type: string
track:
description: "Should we create a sensor true
or ignore it false
?"
required: true
type: boolean
default: true
search:
description: If set will only trigger for matched events.
required: false
type: string
offset:
description: >
A set of characters that precede a number in the event title
for designating a pre-trigger state change on the sensor.
This should be in the format of HH:MM or MM.
required: false
type: string
default: "!!"
ignore_availability:
description: "Should we respect free
/busy
flags?"
required: false
type: boolean
default: true
max_results:
description: "Max number of entries to retrieve"
required: false
type: integer
default: 5
{% endconfiguration %}
From this we will end up with the binary sensors calendar.test_unimportant
and
calendar.test_important
which will toggle themselves on/off based on events on
the same calendar that match the search value set for each.
You'll also have a sensor calendar.test_everything
that will
not filter events out and always show the next event available.
But what if you only wanted it to toggle based on all events? Just leave out the search parameter.
If you use a #
sign for search
then wrap the whole search term in quotes.
Otherwise everything following the hash sign would be considered a YAML comment.
Sensor attributes
- offset_reached: If set in the event title and parsed out will be
on
/off
once the offset in the title in minutes is reached. So the titleVery important meeting #Important !!-10
would trigger this attribute to beon
10 minutes before the event starts. - all_day:
true
/false
if this is an all day event. Will befalse
if there is no event found. - message: The event title with the
search
andoffset
values extracted. So in the above example for offset_reached the message would be set toVery important meeting
- description: The event description.
- location: The event Location.
- start_time: Start time of event.
- end_time: End time of event.
Service google.add_event
You can use the service google.add_event
to create a new calendar event in a calendar. Calendar id's can be found in the file google_calendars.yaml
. All dates and times are in your local time, the integration gets your time zone from your configuration.yaml
file.
Service data attribute | Optional | Description | Example |
---|---|---|---|
calendar_id |
no | The id of the calendar you want. | *****@group.calendar.google.com |
summary |
no | Acts as the title of the event. | Bowling |
description |
yes | The description of the event. | Birthday bowling |
start_date_time |
yes | The date and time the event should start. | 2019-03-10 20:00:00 |
end_date_time |
yes | The date and time the event should end. | 2019-03-10 23:00:00 |
start_date |
yes | The date the whole day event should start. | 2019-03-10 |
end_date |
yes | The date the whole day event should end. | 2019-03-11 |
in |
yes | Days or weeks that you want to create the event in. | "days": 2 |
You either use start_date_time
and end_date_time
, or start_date
and end_date
, or in
.
Using calendar in automations
A calendar can be used as an external scheduler for special events or reoccurring events instead of hardcoding them in automations.
Trigger as soon as an event starts:
trigger:
platform: state
entity_id: calendar.calendar_name
to: 'on'
By using specific text in the event title, you can set conditions to initiate particular automation flows on designated events while other events will be ignored.
For example, the actions following this condition will only be executed for events named 'vacation':
{% raw %}
condition:
condition: template
value_template: "{{is_state_attr('calendar.calendar_name', 'message', 'vacation') }}"
{% endraw %}